Los Angeles Times

Your face might replace your next iPhone password

- By Hayley Tsukayama Tsukayama writes for the Washington Post.

One of the major new features expected in the next iPhone is a new way to unlock the smartphone: with your face.

At first blush, this may not sound like a big deal. Android has had a version of facial recognitio­n in its operating system, called Face Unlock, since 2011. Samsung, Apple’s chief smartphone rival, has its own version of facial recognitio­n — as well as iris scanning and the standard fingerprin­t reader.

But, thanks to major advances in face-scanning technology, this method is on the rise — and Apple is not the only company interested in taking a new look at the technology. Delta Air Lines, JetBlue Airways and Citibank have piloted or launched programs that use the technology as a means of verificati­on in the last year.

Companies have been pitching facial recognitio­n as a more efficient way to verify identities. There are no pins, no passwords. Unlike with fingerprin­ts, you won’t forget which face is programmed in the phone.

In the past, there have been limitation­s. Hackers thwarted facial recognitio­n sensors with photos or videos of a phone’s owner. Hats or even certain skin tones bewildered sensors. And, of course, there’s the problem of identical twins.

But recent advances in facial recognitio­n tech have addressed some of these issues. Depth-sensing cameras are able to make a sort of three-dimensiona­l map of a face, rather than simply images. Even twins can have slight difference­s in bone structure or head shape, making for much more accurate identifica­tion.

Apple has acquired at least two notable facial recognitio­n companies in recent years, including Prime Sense, which developed the original face-sensing and motion-sensing Kinect for the Xbox. It also bought RealFace, which specialize­d in security applicatio­ns for facial recognitio­n.

The push behind that move is simple, said Gene Munster, managing partner of Loup Ventures: Apple wants to offer a bigger screen. On current iPhones, the fingerprin­t sensor is in the home button on the front of the phone. But Apple is said to be ditching the home button completely, as part of a goal to make the front of the phone nearly all screen and give users more room on which to browse, watch video and buy apps.

Apple declined to comment.

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